The integration tests for admin-only mutations were failing due to an authorization issue. The root cause was that the JWT token used in the tests did not reflect the user's admin role, which was being set directly in the database.
This commit fixes the issue by:
1. Updating the `CreateAuthenticatedUser` test helper to generate a new JWT token after a user's role is changed. This ensures the token contains the correct, up-to-date role.
2. Removing all uses of `auth.ContextWithAdminUser` from the integration tests, making the JWT token the single source of truth for authorization.
This change also removes unused imports and variables that were causing build failures after the refactoring. All integration tests now pass.
This commit introduces a comprehensive set of foundational improvements to make the API more robust, secure, and observable.
The following features have been implemented:
- **Observability Stack:** A new `internal/observability` package has been added, providing structured logging with `zerolog`, Prometheus metrics, and OpenTelemetry tracing. This stack is fully integrated into the application's request pipeline.
- **Centralized Authorization:** A new `internal/app/authz` service has been created to centralize authorization logic. This service is now used by the `user`, `work`, and `comment` services to protect all Create, Update, and Delete operations.
- **Standardized Input Validation:** The previous ad-hoc validation has been replaced with a more robust, struct-tag-based system using the `go-playground/validator` library. This has been applied to all GraphQL input models.
- **Structured Error Handling:** A new set of custom error types has been introduced in the `internal/domain` package. A custom `gqlgen` error presenter has been implemented to map these domain errors to structured GraphQL error responses with specific error codes.
- **`updateUser` Endpoint:** The `updateUser` mutation has been fully implemented as a proof of concept for the new patterns, including support for partial updates and comprehensive authorization checks.
- **Test Refactoring:** The test suite has been significantly improved by decoupling mock repositories from the shared `testutil` package, resolving circular dependency issues and making the tests more maintainable.
This commit isolates the `Work` aggregate into its own package at `internal/domain/work`, following the first step of the refactoring plan in `refactor.md`.
- The `Work` struct, related types, and the `WorkRepository` interface have been moved to the new package.
- A circular dependency between `domain` and `work` was resolved by moving the `AnalyticsRepository` to the `app` layer.
- All references to the moved types have been updated across the entire codebase to fix compilation errors.
- Test files, including mocks and integration tests, have been updated to reflect the new structure.
This commit refactors the GraphQL test suite to resolve persistent build failures and establish a stable, mock-based unit testing environment.
The key changes include:
- Consolidating all GraphQL test helper functions into a single, canonical file (`internal/adapters/graphql/graphql_test_utils_test.go`).
- Removing duplicated test helper code from `integration_test.go` and other test files.
- Creating a new, dedicated unit test file for the `like` and `unlike` mutations (`internal/adapters/graphql/like_resolvers_unit_test.go`) using a mock-based approach.
- Introducing mock services (`MockLikeService`, `MockAnalyticsService`) and updating mock repositories (`MockLikeRepository`, `MockWorkRepository`) in the `internal/testutil` package to support `testify/mock`.
- Adding a `ContextWithUserID` helper function to `internal/platform/auth/middleware.go` to facilitate testing of authenticated resolvers.
These changes resolve the `redeclared in this block` and package collision errors, resulting in a clean and passing test suite. This provides a solid foundation for future Test-Driven Development.
This commit refactors the analytics service to align with the new DDD architecture and exposes it through the GraphQL API.
Key changes:
- A new `AnalyticsService` has been created in `internal/application/services` to encapsulate analytics-related business logic.
- The GraphQL resolver has been updated to use the new `AnalyticsService`, providing a clean and maintainable API.
- The old analytics service and its related files have been removed, reducing code duplication and confusion.
- The `bookmark`, `like`, and `work` services have been refactored to remove their dependencies on the old analytics repository.
- Unit tests have been added for the new `AnalyticsService`, and existing tests have been updated to reflect the refactoring.
Key changes include:
- Moved authorization logic for collection mutations from the GraphQL resolvers to the application service layer, ensuring that ownership checks are handled consistently within the business logic.
- Updated the `collection` command handlers and input structs to accept a user ID for authorization.
- Removed orphaned code, including unused resolver definitions (`workResolver`, `translationResolver`) and misplaced helper functions from `schema.resolvers.go`.
- Re-implemented the `Stats` resolvers for the `Work` and `Translation` types, ensuring they correctly call the `analytics` application service.
- Fixed several build errors related to type mismatches and redeclared functions by regenerating the GraphQL code and correcting helper function signatures.
- Updated integration tests to provide authenticated user context for collection mutations, ensuring that the new authorization checks pass.
This commit completes the Domain-Driven Design (DDD) refactoring, bringing the codebase into a stable, compilable, and fully tested state.
Key changes include:
- Refactored the `localization` service to use a Commands/Queries pattern, aligning it with the new architecture.
- Implemented the missing `GetAuthorBiography` query in the `localization` service to simplify resolver logic.
- Corrected GORM entity definitions for polymorphic relationships, changing `[]Translation` to `[]*Translation` to enable proper preloading of translations.
- Standardized the `TranslatableType` value to use the database table name (e.g., "works") instead of the model name ("Work") to ensure consistent data creation and retrieval.
- Updated GraphQL resolvers to exclusively use application services instead of direct repository access, fixing numerous build errors.
- Repaired all failing unit and integration tests by updating mock objects and correcting test data setup to reflect the architectural changes.
These changes resolve all outstanding build errors and test failures, leaving the application in a healthy and maintainable state.
This commit addresses a broken build state caused by a mid-stream architectural refactoring. The changes align the existing code with the new Domain-Driven Design (DDD-lite) structure outlined in `refactor.md`.
Key changes include:
- Defined missing domain interfaces for `Auth`, `Localization`, and `Search`.
- Refactored application services to use a `Commands` and `Queries` pattern.
- Updated GraphQL resolvers to call application services instead of accessing repositories directly.
- Fixed dependency injection in `cmd/api/main.go` by removing the non-existent `ApplicationBuilder` and manually instantiating services.
- Corrected numerous test files (`integration`, `unit`, and `repository` tests) to reflect the new architecture, including fixing mock objects and test suite setups.
- Added missing database migrations for test schemas to resolve "no such table" errors.
This effort successfully gets the application to a compilable state and passes a significant portion of the test suite, laying the groundwork for further development and fixing the remaining test failures.
This change introduces a service layer to encapsulate the business logic
for each domain aggregate. This will make the code more modular,
testable, and easier to maintain.
The following services have been created:
- author
- bookmark
- category
- collection
- comment
- like
- tag
- translation
- user
The main Application struct has been updated to use these new services.
The integration test suite has also been updated to use the new
Application struct and services.
This is a work in progress. The next step is to fix the compilation
errors and then refactor the resolvers to use the new services.
This commit introduces a new application layer to the codebase, which decouples the GraphQL resolvers from the data layer. The resolvers now call application services, which in turn call the repositories. This change improves the separation of concerns and makes the code more testable and maintainable.
Additionally, this commit introduces dataloaders to solve the N+1 problem in the GraphQL resolvers. The dataloaders are used to batch and cache database queries, which significantly improves the performance of the API.
The following changes were made:
- Created application services for most of the domains.
- Refactored the GraphQL resolvers to use the new application services.
- Implemented dataloaders for the `Author` aggregate.
- Updated the `app.Application` struct to hold the application services instead of the repositories.
- Fixed a large number of compilation errors in the test files that arose from these changes.
There are still some compilation errors in the `internal/adapters/graphql/integration_test.go` file. These errors are due to the test files still trying to access the repositories directly from the `app.Application` struct. The remaining work is to update these tests to use the new application services.
This commit introduces a new blog feature by implementing a JSON schema for blog posts and providing five example content files.
Key changes:
- Created a new directory structure for schemas and content (`schemas/`, `content/blog/`).
- Implemented a JSON schema for blog posts, split into `blog.json` and `_defs.json` for reusability.
- Added five example blog post files with full, realistic content.
- Included a Python script (`validate.py`) to validate the example content against the schema.
This commit implements a robust, production-ready analytics system using an event-driven architecture with Redis and `asynq`.
Key changes:
- Event-Driven Architecture: Instead of synchronous database updates, analytics events (e.g., views, likes, comments) are now published to a Redis queue. This improves API response times and decouples the analytics system from the main application flow.
- Background Worker: A new worker process (`cmd/worker`) has been created to consume events from the queue and update the analytics counters in the database.
- View Counting: Implemented the missing view counting feature for both works and translations.
- New Analytics Query: Added a `popularTranslations` GraphQL query to demonstrate how to use the collected analytics data.
- Testing: Added unit tests for the new event publisher and integration tests for the analytics worker.
Known Issue:
The integration tests for the analytics worker (`AnalyticsWorkerSuite`) and the GraphQL API (`GraphQLIntegrationSuite`) are currently failing due to the lack of a Redis service in the test environment. The tests are written and are expected to pass in an environment where Redis is available on `localhost:6379`, as configured in the CI pipeline.
This commit introduces a new trending works feature to the application.
The feature includes:
- A new `Trending` domain model to store ranked works.
- An `UpdateTrending` method in the `AnalyticsService` that calculates a trending score for each work based on views, likes, and comments.
- A background job that runs hourly to update the trending works.
- A new `trendingWorks` query in the GraphQL API to expose the trending works.
- New tests for the trending feature, and fixes for existing tests.
This commit also includes a refactoring of the analytics repository to use a more generic `IncrementWorkCounter` method, and enhancements to the `WorkStats` and `TranslationStats` models with new metrics like `readingTime`, `complexity`, and `sentiment`.
This commit introduces a comprehensive enhancement of the application's analytics features, addressing performance, data modeling, and feature set.
The key changes include:
- **Performance Improvement:** The analytics repository now uses a database "UPSERT" operation to increment counters, reducing two separate database calls (read and write) into a single, more efficient operation.
- **New Metrics:** The `WorkStats` and `TranslationStats` models have been enriched with new, calculated metrics:
- `ReadingTime`: An estimation of the time required to read the work or translation.
- `Complexity`: A score representing the linguistic complexity of the text.
- `Sentiment`: A score indicating the emotional tone of the text.
- **Service Refactoring:** The analytics service has been refactored to support the new metrics. It now includes methods to calculate and update these scores, leveraging the existing linguistics package for text analysis.
- **GraphQL API Expansion:** The new analytics fields (`readingTime`, `complexity`, `sentiment`) have been exposed through the GraphQL API by updating the `WorkStats` and `TranslationStats` types in the schema.
- **Validation and Testing:**
- GraphQL input validation has been centralized and improved by moving from ad-hoc checks to a consistent validation pattern in the GraphQL layer.
- The test suite has been significantly improved with the addition of new tests for the analytics service and the data access layer, ensuring the correctness and robustness of the new features. This includes fixing several bugs that were discovered during the development process.
This commit introduces analytics features to the application. It includes:
- Extended domain models for storing analytics data.
- An analytics repository and service for managing the data.
- Integration with GraphQL mutations to update analytics counts.
- New GraphQL queries to expose analytics data.
- Unit and integration tests for the new features.
This commit includes a major refactoring of the GORM many-to-many relationships to use explicit join tables, improving stability and compatibility with GORM's features.
It also implements a large number of previously unimplemented GraphQL mutations for core entities like Collections, Comments, Likes, and Bookmarks.
Key changes:
- Refactored polymorphic many-to-many relationships for Copyright and Monetization to use standard many-to-many with explicit join tables.
- Implemented GraphQL mutations for Collection, Comment, Like, and Bookmark entities, including input validation and authorization checks.
- Added comprehensive integration tests for all new features and refactored code.
- Refactored the GraphQL integration test suite to be type-safe, using generics for response handling as requested.
- Updated repository interfaces and implementations to support the new data model.
- Updated the TODO.md file to reflect the completed work.